META covered call calculator

Live yields, downside cushion, and ex-dividend assignment warnings for Meta Platforms Inc..

META price
Day change

Top 10 META covered call strikes by annualized yield

StrikeExpiryPremiumΔAnnual yield

Loading…

Open the full META calculator →

How covered calls work on META

A covered call on META means you own 100 shares (or a multiple of 100) and sell someone the right to buy them from you at a higher price (the strike) by a fixed date (the expiration). They pay you cash upfront (the premium). For the full mechanics, strike-selection rules, and rolling playbook, read the complete covered-calls guide.

Three outcomes:

META-specific risk considerations

Elevated implied volatility — richer premiums offset by higher assignment risk. META pays a small 0.4% dividend. Dividend-capture early-assignment risk is minimal but worth tracking.

How to use the META covered call calculator

  1. The calculator pre-loads the META live chain. Pick an expiration from the dropdown.
  2. Pick a strike. The Top 10 list above shows the highest-yielding strikes; you can also browse all strikes manually.
  3. Enter your cost basis (what you paid for META) so the static and annualized yields reflect your actual cost.
  4. Read the results: static yield, if-called annualized return, downside cushion, and any ex-dividend assignment warnings.

Related strategies on META

Related tickers for covered-call writing

FAQ

How is annualized yield calculated on a META covered call?

Annualized yield = (Premium ÷ Cost basis) × (365 ÷ days to expiration). The calculator also produces an if-called annualized return that bakes in any upside to the strike and dividends collected before expiration.

What's a good delta for a META covered call?

Most META covered-call sellers target 0.20–0.35 delta. Lower delta gives lower yield with reduced assignment risk; higher delta gives more premium with greater chance of being called away. The strike-selection guide walks through the trade-offs in detail.

Should I worry about early assignment on META?

META pays a small 0.4% dividend. Dividend-capture early-assignment risk is minimal but worth tracking. For the full mechanic of when and why short calls get exercised early, see early assignment explained.